Christopher HELSLEY, Appellant (Defendant), v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee (Plaintiff).
No. 63S00-1406-LW-440.
Supreme Court of Indiana.
Sept. 24, 2015.
225
I affirm under the penalties of perjury, that the above representations are true and accurate.
/s/ Kevin S. Smith
Kevin S. Smith
Gregory F. Zoeller, Attorney General of Indiana, Brian Reitz, Andrew Kobe, Deputy Attorneys General, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellee.
DICKSON, Justice.
Defendant Christopher Helsley was convicted for the April 2001 murders of Brad Maxwell and Marsha Rainey in Pike County and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. In this direct appeal following a second guilt phase trial, he challenges his sentence. We affirm.
The defendant‘s sentence of life imprisonment without parole gives this Court mandatory and exclusive jurisdiction over this appeal.
In 2001, the defendant was an emergency medical technician for Pike County when he killed his coworkers Brad Maxwell and Marsha Rainey. The defendant fired multiple gunshots into the head and neck areas of both victims, and at least one gunshot wound to each of the victims was fired from close range, approximately one foot away. The bodies of Rainey and Maxwell were found in close proximity to one another, both seated in recliners in the living area of the building where emergency medical technicians wait for ambulance calls.1 Rainey had a defensive wound on her hand, indicating that she was shot after Maxwell and was aware that she was
At the sentencing phase of the first trial, the jury was entitled to consider any evidence previously presented to it in the guilt phase of that trial. In the original sentencing phase tried to the first jury, the defendant‘s lawyers presented one brief witness to present mitigation evidence. Defendant had other mitigation evidence he wanted to present. Christopher Helsley was entitled to present this evidence for consideration by the jury, but was deprived due to mistake of his counsel. In order to know whether such evidence would have resulted in a different sentence, and in order to redress the failure of Christopher Helsley‘s original counsel to present such mitigation evidence, this case is being retried to you on the sole issue of whether Christopher Helsley should be sentenced to life without parole or term of years for the murders of Brad Maxwell and Marsha Rainey. . . . [T]he scope of this trial will be more limited than the original trial, as the murder convictions themselves remain intact and are not being challenged.
Tr. at 3-4. At the conclusion of the new sentencing hearing, the jury found that the State had proven the statutory aggravator beyond a reasonable doubt and that the aggravator outweighed the mitigating circumstances. It recommended a sentence of life imprisonment without parole, and the trial court sentenced the defendant accordingly. The defendant now appeals his sentence.
1. Sentence Review Under Appellate Rule 7
The defendant requests that this Court revise his sentence from life imprisonment without parole to a term of years under
To support his request for appellate sentence revision, the defendant advances three reasons: (a) his difficult childhood, (b) his lack of criminal history, and (c) his actions resulted from mental illness. He presents argument only on his lack of criminal history and his mental illness, alleging that he “suffered from borderline personality disorder, severe anxiety, and severe depression—serious and debilitat-
“[T]he question under Appellate Rule 7(B) is not whether another sentence is more appropriate; rather, the question is whether the sentence imposed is inappropriate.” King v. State, 894 N.E.2d 265, 268 (Ind.Ct.App.2008) (emphasis in original), trans. not sought. “Our authority to review and revise a criminal sentence requires that we first give ‘due consideration of the trial court‘s decision.‘” Stephenson v. State, 29 N.E.3d 111, 122 (Ind.2015) (citing
The testimony at the sentencing phase trial included the defendant‘s expert witness, a clinical neuropsychologist, who opined that the defendant was in a dissociative state3 at the time of the murders but also stated that the defendant was a “heightened risk” to be “faking all of this.” Tr. at 209. The expert witness stated, “My assumption has been that, as I mentioned earlier, that, number one, I do believe he was in a dissociative state, but number two, I do also believe that he was making stuff up.” Tr. at 227-28. The expert‘s opinion was based on statements made by the defendant, but much of the information the defendant told him was not corroborated by any other source. The expert testified that: “If everybody and their brother says Chris was loved and never had a problem, and there was never any abuse of any type, [then] you [should] feel free to be very skeptical of this as a contributing factor.” Tr. at 239. Other character witnesses at the sentencing hearing testified that they never remembered the defendant being physically abused and much of their testimony failed to corroborate what the defendant had told the expert witness about the defendant‘s alleged childhood problems and abuse. The expert specifically warned that “you [should] feel free to be very skeptical of [his childhood and mental health] as a contributing factor” if the defendant‘s rep-
My experience in situations like this is that prison oftentimes stabilizes unstable personalities. Because they‘re taken care of. And everything is routine, and they know that they can only go so far and no farther and can‘t get into any more trouble. And so there are certain individuals that do thrive, actually, and do better in prison than they do in the outside world. My very strong sense is that Chris might be one of those guys. He‘s done, from what I gather, pretty well in . . . different aspects of his prison life.
Tr. at 241.
The defendant‘s brief in this appeal does not attempt to connect his mental illnesses to either his character or the nature of the offense, and his argument does not separately address these two factors to be considered under
In this case, the offense was a cold, calculated double murder of two coworkers without provocation. The defendant‘s actions did not show restraint or a lack of brutality, and there was no evidence that either murder showed any regard for human life. Both of the victims received at least one gunshot wound from close range, and they both suffered all of their multiple gunshot wounds to their head and neck areas. Each inflicted wound was life threatening or death inducing independent of the other gunshot wounds. We do not find that the defendant‘s claim of mental illness diminishes the gravity of his conduct in committing these murders. In addition, notwithstanding the alleged troubled childhood, mental illnesses, and lack of criminal history, consideration of the defendant‘s character does not warrant a sentence revision.
With respect to the defendant‘s request for
2. Review of the Jury‘s Sentencing Decision
Alternatively, the defendant briefly argues that the jury‘s decision to place more weight on the aggravating circumstance than the mitigating circumstances constituted an abuse of discretion. We understand the defendant to argue that his difficult childhood, mental illnesses, lack of prior criminal history, lack of violent behavior, lack of motive for this crime, and remorse, while not able to absolve him of responsibility for the murders, outweigh the single aggravating circumstance presented, making “[t]he jury‘s verdict . . . an abuse of discretion.” Appellant‘s Br. at 14. In response, the State argues that
The defendant does not challenge the jury‘s finding of the statutory aggravator—that he committed or was convicted of another murder. See
The jury verdict in this case declared, “We, the Jury, find that the charged aggravating circumstances that exist outweigh any mitigating circumstances herein.” Tr. at 324. In a case involving the death penalty or a sentence of life imprisonment without parole, once a statutory aggravator is found by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt, “Indiana . . . places the weighing process [of any aggravating and/or mitigating circumstances] in the hands of the jury” to recommend a punishment. Ritchie v. State, 809 N.E.2d 258, 268 (Ind.2004). The exercise of such judgment “is not capable of evaluation beyond a reasonable doubt, and our statute properly omits any standard by which it is to be measured.” Id. (emphasis added). Instead, the statute simply states that “[b]efore a sentence may be imposed under this section, the jury . . . must find that . . . any mitigating circumstances that exist are outweighed by the aggravating circumstance or circumstances.”
Conclusion
Finding that (a) the nature of the offense and the defendant‘s character do not
RUSH, C.J., and RUCKER, DAVID, and MASSA, JJ., concur.
